Thursday, February 7, 2013

CÉSAR PELLI: NATIONAL MUSEUM OF ART, OSAKA

The National Museum of Art (2004), designed by Cesar Pelli in Osaka, is so different from the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, that is hard to believe at first glance that this work belongs to the same architect.
While the Malaysian towers stand skyward beating world
records, the museum in Osaka was developed three levels underground.
While the complex in Malaysia was developed based on a meticulous and strict
geometry that is clearly expressed in the form and silhouette of the
towers, the museum in Japan presents an explosive, amorphous facade, completely free of geometric constraints.
It is possible, however, to recognize in both examples an intention to
create a significant place, to establish a landmark that will develop the collective memory of
the site. In both cases, this architect from Tucuman, Argentina, has demonstrated versatility in the development of such different solutions.

Panorama showing the Museum of Art in the foreground and the Science Museum in the background.Photo courtesy of AIA

BACKGROUND.

The World Expo'70 took place on the outskirts of Osaka, and among the facilities that were implemented for that event, the Expo Museum of Fine Arts was developed.
In 1977 this building was transformed into the National Museum of Art
in Osaka, dedicated to house mainly contemporary art collections.

In 2004 the museum was moved to the east end of the city near the
coast, to a location on the Nakano island (or Nakanoshima),
between the rivers Tosabori and Dojima, an area renown as Osaka's Arts District.

DEVELOPMENT

Due to limitations of the area it was decided that this 13,500 m2 complex, should be developed underground, with two galleries for permanent and temporary installations.
Due to its location in an area crisscrossed by many underground
streams, and given that the building would be below the level of the
rivers, triple-layered walls were built (concrete, waterproof and the inner wall of the museum), reaching a thickness of 3 meters.
This armor provides the building with additional protection against
moisture and earthquakes, and because of that it has earned the nickname of "submarine".

The museum is located on the island Nakano.Google Earth Image

Aerial view of the Osaka Museum of Art, next to the ellipticalbuilding of the Osaka Science Museum .Photo Courtesy of Pelli Clarke Pelli.

The facade, however, stands as a light structure -made of stainless steel
tubes coated in titanium- that emerges from the ground level, forming a sculptural spasm that exceeds 50 m. in height, and spreading like the wings of a mystical bird. This sculpture wraps the steel and glass lobby, which affords generous natural light to the interior.

"The steel sculpture is allowed to sway, to some extent, in all directions." says Pelli. "Given its height and location, wind and earthquake design posed unique engineering challenges. Also, many of the steel tubes must penetrate the skylight glass. For these junctures, the architects designed a watertight seal with a bellows. The bellows allow the steel tube to move 4–6 inches in any direction without breaking the glass or causing leaks. "

Photo courtesy of Oriana Nakano.

Details of the facade.Photo C.Zeballos

Next to the museum there is a bamboo garden. Both the garden and the structure are an allegory of a bamboo forest that used to grow naturally in the Nakanoshima Island before its urban development.

Some have criticized this dramatic rupture with the environment, but
others have praised this synthesis between architecture
and sculpture and the explicit feeling of freedom and contemporaneity expressed in its facade.
However, although this metal and glass structure bends and twists to
form the building entrance, it does not transmit the flamboyant drama involving,
for example, the works of Frank Gehry . On the contrary, the use of tubes instead of plates makes the whole element lighter and more transparent. I would say that despite its apparent chaos, it is possible to perceive Pelli's orderly hand .

Inside the lobby.Photo courtesy of AIA

Entrance and lobby. Photos courtesy of Oriana Nakano

Perhaps as interesting as this external capriccio, is the spatial sensation inside this transparent lobby, a monumental space bathed in a warm and
welcoming light that, an ever-changing play of light and
shadow, hits on the museum walls, coated in earthy colors.

Sections of the museum.Courtesy of Pelli Clark Pelli

First floor, courtesy of the National Museum of Art, Osaka.

Dotted with nice details, such as a series of columns which flourish from a single point to the ceiling, the main function of this
modern greenhouse is to provide natural light to the underground
galleries.

From the glazed lobby we descend through the escalators to the galleries, located below and arranged as L-shape.

The first level houses the reception, auditorium, restaurant, offices
and the souvenir shop.

First basement, courtesy of the National Museum of Art, Osaka.

The double height between thislevel and the first basement is an ideal spaceto admire an impressive work by Miró (Innocent Laughter, 1969, ceramic tiles 640 pieces, 500x1200 cm, in 1977 it was received as a gift from The Commemorative Association for the Japan World Exposition’70).

Details of the double-height living room, which houses a painting by Miró and the hanging sculpture by Alexander Calder.Photo C.Zeballos

Other remarkable works on the first level are: Jiro Takamatsu’s Study for “Shadow”, Two men (1977), pencil, colored pencil on tracing paper, to be found close to the entrance of the museum shop; Henry Moore’s Large Standing Figure: Knife Edge (1961-1976), bronze, a 1977 gift from the Agency for Cultural Affairs, which is placed close to the ticket check-point; and Alexander Calder’s London (1962), painted sheet aluminum and steel rod, a work in red suspended from the ceiling.

Both second basement (B2) and third basement (B3) host temporary exhibitions – around eight each year, while exhibits from the museum’s permanent collection of nearly 6500 works, including new acquisitions, are presented on the B2 level (Collection 1: art from the 1960s (2010), Collection 2: recent acquisitions (2010), Collection 3: Japanese Art 1950-2010 (2010), Collection 4: a century of contemporary art (2011), Collection Exhibition: Japanese artists in the US (2011), Nakanoshima Collections (2011), the 35th Anniversary of the National Museum of Art, Osaka: the Allure of the Collection (2012), etc.)

Second and third basement, courtesy of the National Museum of Art, Osaka.

Profile Detail of the staircase.Photo C.Zeballos

The following pictures illustrate the exhibition "Eternity of Eternal Eternity", displaying some of the works of the famous Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama. The photos are a courtesy of Ms. Oriana Nakano.

With an exterior design inspired by the life force of the bamboo and
the development of contemporary art, this new
facility serves well as a space for interaction between the public and
art. The Art Museum is related to the Science Museum, a building that shares with the museum an elliptical plaza. In the vicinity there is a building called Nakanoshima Mitsui Building , also designed by Cesar Pelli & Associates.

I would like to thank Ms. Oriana Nakano, Curatorial Assistant at the National Museum Osaka, for her kind collaboration in this post, particularly for the pictures on the Yayoi Kusama exhibition, since some installations are usually difficult to photograph inside museums in Japan.

MY ARCHITECTURAL MOLESKINE

MY ARCHITECTURAL MOLESKINE

Notes on the fly throughout an exciting journey, a logboof of emotions and senses while walking between architectural spaces bathed in light, surrounded by landscape, or being part of it.

Just like in a moleskine - that notebook where travelers compiled writings and drawings of their visits- this blog offers you, dear reader, my own collection based on my personal experience about interesting sites visited in recent years.

Welcome to My Architectural Moleskine

"What I hear, I forget; what I read, I remember; what I do, I learn; what I teach, I know."

Old Chinese proverb.

About me

Architect and urban designer, professor in universities in Peru and Russia. Post PhD. researcher on urban design and landscape in Japan. Earned his PhD in Urban Environmental Planning at Kyoto University, Japan and Master degrees in Sustainability in Argentina and Environmental Management in Peru.

The texts, graphics and photos, unless otherwise stated, belong to the author of this blog.They may be used for personal and academic purposes, as long as the respective authors and source are acknowledged.Its use is not allowed for commercial purposes.